A legendary poker playing outlaw, Triggerman, arrives to town for the wildest gambling tournament on this side of the west.A legendary poker playing outlaw, Triggerman, arrives to town for the wildest gambling tournament on this side of the west.A legendary poker playing outlaw, Triggerman, arrives to town for the wildest gambling tournament on this side of the west.
Maria P. Petruolo
- Millie Mitchell
- (as Mary Petruolo)
Benjamin Petry
- Silver
- (as Ben Petry)
Mark Sivertsen
- Flying Dutchman
- (as Mark Siversten)
Anthony Jordan Atler
- Scrawny Kid
- (as Anthony 'AJ' Atler)
Storyline
Did you know
- TriviaMade for Italian TV but shot in English in Santa Fe, New Mexico.
- GoofsWhen Silver shows off his shooting skills he is using a Colt .45 Peacemaker, a single action revolver that requires the hammer be pulled back manually before firing each round. Doing this one handed as Silver would have had to do is difficult enough for an adult, for a kid Silvers age it would be impossible, his hands are neither big nor muscular enough, you can clearly see his thumb remains closed around the gun throughout the whole scene. Also light can be seen though the chamber as the camera looks directly down the barrel, there's no way that could happen with a fully loaded gun, the continuity people didn't even bother to blank off where the cartridges should be.
- ConnectionsFollows Doc West (2009)
- SoundtracksDoc West
By Cesare De Natale and Maurizio De Angelis
Performed by Guido De Angelis and Maurizio De Angelis (as Oliver Onions)
Featured review
This is a sequel to the Terence Hill Italian television movie "Doc West" (apparently, both movies were filmed back to back). Whatever you thought of the first movie, chances are you'll feel about the same about this follow-up. For a television movie, the production values are very good, with warm cinematography, skillful camera movements, and a pretty expensive look. Also, Paul Sorvino does a good job as the town sheriff. Unfortunately, that's all about what I can say is positive about this movie. Once again, Terence Hill looks and acts very tired - at times it looks like he is wishing he wasn't there. There are a number of subplots that are not resolved (such as the cowboy who falls in love with a Chinese woman), and the main plot concerning the poker tournament is almost an afterthought. The movie isn't really actively bad - it's just so tired and sluggish that it doesn't have the energy to really annoy you, instead making you fall asleep in front of your television set.
Details
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content